Mortgages Flashcards
Definition of mortgage
- the conveyance of a security interest in land, intended by the parties to be collateral for the re-payment of a monetary obligation.
- In other words, the owner of real estate gives the lender a lien in that real estate to secure or backup the loan that the lender makes.
A mortgage is the union of these two elements
- A debt; and
- A voluntary transfer of a security interest (lien) in debtor’s land to secure a debt.
Purchase Money Mortgage
An extension of value by a lender who takes as collateral a security interest in the very real estate that its loan enables the debtor to acquire.
Non-Purchase Money Mortgage
An extension of value by a lender who takes as collateral a security interest in a piece of real estate in exchange for money.
Writing requirement
A mortgage typically must be in writing b/c SoF.
This is called a legal mortgage.
VA follows the lein theory, which holds this.
- borrower will hold the deed to the real estate property for the life of the mortgage.
- The mortgage agreement serves as the lender’s lien on the property until the loan is paid back completely
Transfer of Interests
- All parties to a mortgage can transfer their interests
- Transfer by Mortgagee
- The mortgage automatically follows a properly transferred note.
- Transfer by Mortgagor
- Debtor sells mortgaged property
- Mortgage remains on the land so ong as the mortgage instrument was properly recorded.
All recording statutes apply to these two things
Mortgages and deeds
Who prevails in each type of recording statute if a mortgagee and BFP both lay claim to the same plot of land.
- In a notice state, a subsequent BFP prevails over a prior grantee or mortgagee who has not yet recorded properly at the time the BFP takes.
- In a race-notice state, the first BFP/mortgagee to properly record wins.
The party that is liabile for the mortgage when O sells the property.
- If B has “assumed the mortgage”:
- both O and B are personally liable.
- B is primarily liable, and O remains secondarily liable.
- If B takes “subject to the mortgage”:
- B assumes no personal liability.
- Only O is personally liable.
- But, if recorded, the mortgage remains on the land.
- Thus, if O does not pay, the mortgage may be foreclosed.
How a foreclosure happens
- Debtor defaulted on the mortgage. Mortgagee must look to the land for satisfaction
- Mortgagee must foreclose by proper judicial proceeding.
- At foreclosure, the land is sold and the sale proceeds go to satisfying the debt.
What happens if the proceeds from the sale are less than the amount owed
Mortgagee brings a deficiency judgment against debtor
What happens if the proceeds are more than the amount owed.
Junior liens are paid off in order of their priority. Any remaining surplus goes to the debtor.
Effect of Forecloure on Various Interestholders
- Foreclosure will terminate interests junior to the mortgage being foreclosed but will not affect senior interests
- Junior lienholders will be paid in descending order with the proceeds from the sale.
- Junior lienholders should be able to proceed for a deficiency judgment.
- But once foreclosure happens and proceeds distributed, junior lienholders can no longer look to the prop for satisfaction.
Who the necessary parties to the foreclosure action are
- Every person whose interest is claimed to be subordinate to the foreclosing party’s mortgage lien.
- The debtor-mortgagor
- For both the foreclosure and any personal deficiency judgement